Landmark reforms designed to improve the lives of children with
special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) have failed to
prevent a huge rise in legal disputes and tribunal hearings over
the support they receive, which is symptomatic of fundamental
imbalances in the SEND system, new research commissioned by the
Local Government Association suggests today.
Councils share the ambition of the Government’s SEND reforms in
2014 under the Children and Families Act to reduce the need for
parents to have to fight to get support.
However, a new study commissioned by the LGA - ‘Agreeing to
disagree? Research into arrangements for avoiding disagreements
and resolving disputes in the SEND system in England’ - has
found that these aspirations have not been achieved due to the
soaring level of cases that are not resolved without being taken
to a tribunal. It comes councils increasingly struggle with a
lack of funding to meet significantly increased demand for SEND
support.
The LGA, which represents councils across England, is calling on
the Government to urgently address this in its forthcoming review
of the SEND system, so parents and carers avoid having to take
cases to tribunal.
The new LGA report warns the SEND system has instead become more
adversarial, with new figures in the report showing:
- The number of appeals to tribunals over SEND disagreements
has more than doubled since the reforms, rising by 111 per cent
between 2013/14 and 2020/21
- Over 9 in 10 appeals are decided in favour of families,
overturning the original decision made by councils. Prior to the
reforms, 83 per cent of tribunal appeals were made in favour of
the appellant.
- Before the reforms in 2013/14, more disagreements were
resolved before they got to a formal tribunal hearing with around
a fifth of appeals (21 per cent) decided at a tribunal, whereas
now the figure is almost two thirds (64 per cent)
- The proportion of decisions appealed has gone up from 1.16
per cent at the time of the reforms to 1.74 per cent in 2020
The research found that the main factor behind the rise in the
number and rate of appeals was not councils failing to meet their
legal duties under the Act, but instead was reflective of deeper,
fundamental problems that need to be addressed within the SEND
system.
The report also raises concerns about a growth in unregulated
organisations encouraging and advising families to appeal.
Most councils reported that tribunal appeals are more likely to
come from more affluent families, and less likely from those from
more deprived backgrounds, highlighting a potential lack of
equity of access to dispute resolution.
While councils fully recognise the right of families to take
appeals to tribunals, the LGA says the huge number of cases is
indicative of fundamental imbalances in the SEND system.
The LGA is calling on the Government to use the SEND review –
announced in 2019 – to significantly reduce the need for such a
high number of cases to be taken to taken to tribunal, by making
fundamental changes to the SEND system.
This could involve providing greater clarity around the level of
need that would require SEND support; making mainstream education
settings more accountable for SEND inclusion, and enabling
decisions over SEND provision to be made jointly by all those
responsible, such as health and care bodies, and not just
councils.
While the Government recently announced much-needed funding for
SEND support services, which will be vital to ensure support can
be provided, this alone will not fix the underlying flaws within
the system.
Cllr Anntoinette Bramble, Chair of the LGA’s Children and Young
People Board, said:
“It is vital the Government’s SEND review urgently tackles the
increasingly adversarial nature of the SEND system since the 2014
reforms and minimises the need for legal disputes and tribunal
hearings, providing the support that every young person and their
family needs.
“Parents rightly expect and aspire to see that their child has
the best possible education and receives the best possible
support, and councils do everything they can to achieve this,
within the budgets made available by the Government.
“However, the soaring number of tribunal hearings over the SEND
support provided to a young person, and the overwhelming number
decided in the appellant’s favour, is indicative of a system that
is not working.
“The SEND reforms introduced in 2014, while of the very best
intentions, have unfortunately not delivered. The factors that
are driving these trends are symptomatic of challenges within the
wider SEND system. This must be addressed in the forthcoming SEND
review.”
Notes to editors
The announcement of the
SEND reforms in 2014 under the Children and Families Act
The reforms set out ambitious proposals to improve the support
provided to young people, including earlier, dialogue-based,
non-judicial dispute resolution in a way that balanced the needs
of individual young people and equity of access to support for
all. They also extended the age at which support is
available to 25, which significantly increased the number of
children and young people eligible for support. Until recently
these reforms were not accompanied by additional funding for
councils or their partners.